Athletics: Golden London run has triumphant Pearson eyeing Tokyo
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[August 14, 2017]
MELBOURNE (Reuters) -
Australia's Sally Pearson will reward herself with "volumes" of
greasy food after winning her second 100 meters hurdles world
championship but plans to keep herself in top shape in the long-term
for a tilt at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.
Pearson's brilliant win at the London Stadium on Saturday capped two
years of injury heartbreak and made her Australia's most decorated
track athlete of the modern era.
The 2012 London Olympic champion was denied a chance to defend her
title last year at Rio due to a hamstring injury but hopes her body
can stand up for Tokyo in 2020, when she would be just shy of her
34th birthday.
"Of course, you always think about Tokyo," the rejuvenated hurdler
told state radio ABC.
"I've always want to go to three Olympics. Missing out on Rio was
heartbreaking but obviously it was there for a reason.
"As I've said, I've got to look after my body. Definitely (running
at) the Commonwealth Games next year. And who knows what will happen
after that?
"Tokyo is only three years away ... I just have to listen to my body
and be smart about it."
After missing out on Rio, Pearson coached her own way back to the
top, reasoning that after multiple injury setbacks, no-one knew her
body like she did.
She will cast off the unflinching self-discipline for a brief period
to eat what she wants before plotting a path to victory at next
year's Commonwealth Games, where she will be the headline attraction
near her home on the Gold Coast.
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Sally Pearson of Australia celebrates after winning the gold medal.
REUTERS/John Sibley
"Volumes of food .... I like to reward myself with greasy food,"
said Pearson, who won her first 100m hurdles world title at Daegu in
2011 and grabbed a silver at the Moscow championships two years
later.
Also a silver medalist at the 2008 Beijing Games, Pearson's third
individual world championship medal surpassed the record of iconic
Aboriginal sprinter Cathy Freeman, who won back-to-back 400m titles
in 1997-99 and clinched gold at the 2000 Sydney Olympics.
A week after mourning the death of Betty Cuthbert, the only athlete
to win 100, 200 and 400m Olympic golds, local media hailed Pearson
as Australia's "latest golden girl".
"Cuthbert was the center of a much cherished and glorious part of
Australian sporting history," prominent local pundit Patrick Smith
wrote in The Australian newspaper.
"That spirit lives on. It is indestructible. It lives on in Sally
Pearson who sometimes has a fragility that is a decoy for the
toughness that lines her body and soul."
(Reporting by Ian Ransom; Editing by Peter Rutherford)
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